Yes. The moon rotates in relation to the stars, so it has an axis of rotation.
Our moon rotates at the same speed it orbits so we always see 1 side. But the odds of a body not rotating at all are very slim.
No there is not a known planet moon or star that does not rotate
All moons rotate about their axis'
Not in OUR solar system there aren't.
The sun spins.
There is only Venus, and Uranus. Both spin opposite direction of Earth.
because of the way rock and debris hit them they spin faster
They both spin on an axis.
That depends on which solar system and planet you are asking about - we now know for planets orbiting other stars.
All the planets that we know about spin, yes. Some spin faster or slower, or on a different axis, but they all spin.
Yes.
rotation
Yes, all planets that we know of have at least some spin - their rotation on the axis being the planet's day. In our solar system Jupiter spins the fastest - with a day under 10 hours long.
Because It Has To Spin Like Planets Do
The spin of the Earth is residual from the formation of the solar system. The original "whirlpools" of matter started to spin as they orbited the sun due to the Coriolis force acting on them. This caused them to spin around the planets. his spin stayed after the planets firmed up into discrete balls
They spin clockwise
The sun spins.
The center of the galaxy.
no
Yes. Any rotating object has an axis of rotation.
the planets originated from clouds of dust that spin on a disk shaped plain.